ucla kaiser permanente center for health equity

8
UCLA KAISER PERMANENTE CENTER FOR HEALTH EQUITY

Upload: ucla-fielding-school-of-public-health

Post on 23-Jul-2016

226 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity

U C L A K A I S E R P E R M A N E N T EC E N T E R F O R H E A LT H E Q U I T Y

Page 2: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity

WE CREATE LASTING PARTNERSHIPS THAT LEVERAGE COMMUNITY ASSETS TO IMPROVE HEALTH.

Page 3: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity

Our community-partnered approach is based on the belief that a healthy society equally values the well-being of all its members.

Since its establishment in 2004, the UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity has collaborated

with a broad range of community partners to design, implement, evaluate, and disseminate programs

that address the most pressing health inequities in our communities. Regardless of gender, age,

ethnicity, income, education, sexual identity, or disability status, everyone deserves an equal

opportunity to thrive.

W H O W E A R E

Page 4: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity

We conduct rigorous social science research to design the most effective and efficient programs to tackle health inequities.

Our programs reach people where they live, learn, work, play, and seek health care. We work closely

with key community agencies — from inner-city community clinics to schools and churches — as

equal partners in our shared vision of health equity. Our center is not content to research and

identify health inequities and we don’t parachute into communities to deliver top-down public

health interventions. We build lasting cross-sector partnerships that empower communities to

fundamentally reshape policies and environments to produce systemic changes that can dramatically

improve health outcomes.

W H AT W E D O

Page 5: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity

Our work seamlessly combines rigorous scientific methods with deep local knowledge of key community stakeholders — a truly innovative approach.

We identify community assets that are often overlooked. A Korean church isn’t simply a place where

people go for an hour every Sunday. For many, it’s the centerpiece of the community and a place

to connect with critical resources. If you want to impact high rates of Hepatitis B, liver cancer,

and obesity in the Los Angeles Korean community, you don’t take to the streets of Koreatown.

You go to church. Our center succeeds because it meets people where they are. Our programs

build community ownership and buy-in to produce lasting change. With the help of science, these

vibrant partnerships allow communities to invest wisely in effective programs with real impact.

H OW W E D O I T

Page 6: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity
Page 7: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity

The UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity collaborates with community organizations to implement sustainable policy and environmental change to achieve the greatest possible collective impact.

We work with over 300 community organizations including schools, health and social service agencies,

faith-based organizations, nonprofits, and worksites. Together we conduct projects to increase

cancer screening and vaccination, reduce smoking and exposure to environmental pollutants, and

increase healthy eating and physical activity to prevent and control chronic disease in the most

affected communities. Our approaches and partnerships are as diverse as our city.

With obesity for instance, what works is a fundamental redesign of an environment so that the

healthy choice is the default choice and people must go out of their way to do the less healthy thing.

That’s how lasting, systems-level change is created to improve health in communities. We designed

and tested innovative approaches with community organizations in urban centers throughout the

United States. From schools and worksites, to churches, health clinics and community centers,

our project reached over 200,000 vulnerable residents. Many of these community partners have

now scaled up these projects and each has become a model for other communities struggling

with chronic rates of obesity.

Learn more at: healthequity.ucla.edu

O U R I M PAC T

Page 8: UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity

healthequity.ucla.edu